A middle school attended mostly by Tibetan pupils in Yushu, Qinghai, sent to all parents a disturbing letter, confirming CCP’s plans of eradicating religion.
Communist Propaganda
“Patriotic Education Law”: Xi Jinping’s Great Indoctrination Plan (Now Including Taiwan and the Diaspora)
The Standing Committee of the National People’s Congress approved a new version of the much-awaited statute, hailed as one of the most important new Chinese laws.
The New “Research Centre of Xi Jinping Thought on Culture”: An Anti-Western Propaganda Machine
Its aim is “to fend off the Western countries’ values and cut off their influence”—with a little help from Putin.
“When Marx Met Confucius”: The Film Xi Jinping Wants You to See
A propaganda movie, promoted by the Chinese President himself, shows Marx agreeing with Confucius and both (not surprisingly) agreeing with Xi Jinping.
“Where the Snow Lotus Blooms”: TV Series on Tibet Is CCP Propaganda
The most successful series of the year on Chinese TV promotes a false “old Tibetan spirit” and ignores real Tibetan culture.
“Calling a Rat a Duck”: A New Scandal in China
In a college canteen in Jiangxi, a student found a rat’s head in what was served to him as duck. The CCP’s answer: “A rat is a duck if the Party says so.”
Bible College Teachers Indoctrinated at Beijing’s Central Institute of Socialism
Christian professors from all over the country were summoned to the capital to attend a mandatory course on Marxism and Xi Jinping thought.
Xi Jinping: Beijing’ National Art Museum Is Not Socialist Enough
If you believe the mission of the NAMOC is to showcase the best Chinese art you are wrong, the President says. It should teach visitors the “correct political orientation.”
Videos Reveal the Indoctrination and Militarization of Uyghur Children
Boys aged 5–11 should repeat on camera: “My dream is to be a member of the Chinese People’s Liberation Army.”
China’s Crackdown on “Script Killing,” Act 2
After the 2021 regulations, the CCP wants to put the immensely popular offline “script entertainment” games under even tighter control.









